TL;DR
The private credit market is facing a severe liquidity and valuation stress test as major funds execute deep asset markdowns and retail investors rush for the exits. In response, traditional banks are aggressively slashing leverage to direct lenders, forcing managers to gate redemptions and inject their own capital to stabilize vehicles. The structural mismatch between illiquid corporate loans and liquid retail fund structures has officially cracked open.
The Valuation Reckoning
Sustained high interest rates are forcing massive asset markdowns across private credit portfolios, exposing deep distress among mid-market corporate borrowers (https://www.reuters.com/legal/transactional/private-credit-funds-slash-loan-values-borrower-stress-rises-2026-05-12/).
"Private credit funds have marked down more than a tenth of their loans by at least 50%, new data from MSCI showed, as corporate borrowers in this $3.5 trillion market struggle with growing debt burdens." — [MSCI Data Reveals 10% of Private Credit Loans Marked Down by Half
]
"The report also found that private debt funds' returns have plummeted, slumping to 1.8% in the fourth quarter of 2025..." — [MSCI Data Reveals 10% of Private Credit Loans Marked Down by Half
]
This deterioration is no longer a localized issue but a systemic revaluation as smaller, less-scaled funds bear the brunt of the downturn, with quarterly returns plummeting to 1.8% (https://www.reuters.com/legal/transactional/private-credit-funds-slash-loan-values-borrower-stress-rises-2026-05-12/). The rapid decline in returns highlights how quickly borrower cash flows are drying up, prompting managers to execute deep write-downs on assets once deemed secure.
What to watch: Whether the widening of credit spreads forces further net asset value write-downs in upcoming quarterly earnings reports (https://www.reuters.com/legal/transactional/carlyle-cuts-private-credit-funds-value-by-2-2026-05-11/).
The Bank Backlash
Traditional investment banks are aggressively protecting themselves by pulling back leverage and slashing credit lines to major direct lending vehicles (https://www.cnbc.com/2026/05/11/kkr-private-credit-fund-fsk-jpmorgan-chase-credit.html).
"The latter move, lowering the minimum shareholders' equity floor from $5.05 billion to $3.75 billion, gives FSK more breathing room. But it also indicates that lenders believe the firm's assets have further to fall." — [FSK KKR Capital Takes $560M Loss
]
"In response to the mounting credit stress, a JPMorgan Chase-led syndicate of banks slashed FSK's revolving credit facility by $648 million..." — [FSK KKR Capital Takes $560M Loss
]
While banks previously insulated themselves by shifting direct asset-level losses to insurers, they are now squeezing direct lenders from the liability side by slashing revolving credit facilities and raising borrowing costs (https://www.cnbc.com/2026/05/11/kkr-private-credit-fund-fsk-jpmorgan-chase-credit.html). This credit squeeze forces managers to step in with emergency support packages to prevent further valuation write-downs.
What to watch: Whether other major bank syndicates follow JPMorgan's lead in marking down private credit collateral (https://www.cnbc.com/2026/05/11/kkr-private-credit-fund-fsk-jpmorgan-chase-credit.html).
The Retail Liquidity Gating
A wave of redemption requests is exposing the structural vulnerability of offering liquid exits on highly illiquid private debt assets (https://www.reuters.com/legal/transactional/partners-group-expects-slowdown-new-assets-due-redemption-uncertainties-2026-06-04/).
"Wednesday's news of Partners Group capping redemptions is among the first signs of how stresses in private credit... were spreading." — [Retail Evergreen Funds Gate Redemptions
]
"Investors in a $31.3 billion private credit fund managed by Cliffwater submitted requests to withdraw 17% of shares in the second quarter, but redemptions have been capped at 5%..." — [Retail Evergreen Funds Gate Redemptions
]
Wealthy retail investors are discovering that "evergreen" structures do not guarantee immediate liquidity during a market downturn, leaving platforms with no choice but to enforce strict quarterly withdrawal caps (https://www.reuters.com/legal/transactional/partners-group-expects-slowdown-new-assets-due-redemption-uncertainties-2026-06-04/). This dynamic creates a severe backlog of unfulfilled redemptions, threatening to trigger broader panic across listed asset managers.
What to watch: Whether the gating of these flagship funds triggers a broader contagion sell-off in publicly listed alternative asset managers (https://www.reuters.com/legal/transactional/cliffwater-investors-ask-pull-17-private-credit-fund-letter-shows-2026-06-03/).
What surprised us
- The Depth of the Markdowns in Smaller Funds: While the market focuses on mega-managers, MSCI revealed that 13% of loans in smaller private debt funds are valued below 50 cents on the dollar [MSCI Data Reveals 10% of Private Credit Loans Marked Down by Half
]. This points to an existential struggle for smaller players that lack the scale to absorb sustained borrower distress.
- Banks Actively Squeezing BDC Collateral: JPMorgan Chase isn't just watching from the sidelines; they are actively marking down private credit collateral on their own books and aggressively trimming credit facilities like FSK's [FSK KKR Capital Takes $560M Loss
]. This proves traditional banks are aggressively de-risking at the first sign of BDC distress.
- The Rapid Spread of Gating From Credit to Equity: Partners Group had to cap redemptions at its 5% quarterly limit for its Global Value SICAV fund, proving that the liquidity mismatch in private credit is rapidly bleeding into broader private market vehicles [Retail Evergreen Funds Gate Redemptions
].